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・ John W. Thompson
・ John W. Thompson (Manitoba politician)
・ John W. Tibbatts
・ John W. Troxell
・ John W. Tucker House
・ John W. Turk Jr. Coal Plant
・ John W. Mackenzie
・ John W. Maddox
・ John W. Magee
・ John W. Maher
・ John W. Mahoney
・ John W. Maloney
・ John W. Marchetti
・ John W. Marshall
・ John W. Martin
John W. Martin Mennonites
・ John W. Matthews, Jr.
・ John W. Mayhew
・ John W. McCarter
・ John W. McCarty House
・ John W. McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies
・ John W. McCormack Post Office and Courthouse
・ John W. McCormick
・ John W. McCoy
・ John W. McCreery
・ John W. McDevitt
・ John W. McDonald
・ John W. McGrath
・ John W. Meagher
・ John W. Mecom, Sr.


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John W. Martin Mennonites : ウィキペディア英語版
John W. Martin Mennonites
The John W. Martin Mennonites were a group of Old Order Mennonite mainly in Elkhart County, Indiana, that existed from 1907 to 1972 as an independent church, which never allowed the ownership of automobiles.
The group emerged when they split in 1907 from the Indiana (Old Order) Mennonite Conference (Wislers), because the Indiana Mennonite Conference had allowed telephone and electricity. The bishop, who was instrumental to the split, was John W. Martin, whose name the new group took.
There were also three small congregation of John W. Martin Mennonites in Ohio, but over the years they dwindled away and by 1970 they were all extinct.〔Stephen Scott: An Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups, page 32.〕 In 1947 about one-third of the group returned to the Wislers under the leadership of Joseph F. Martin, bishop John W. Martin's son. In 1972, they merged with the Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church (Wengers), the largest horse and buggy Mennonite church, which is mainly located in Pennsylvania, and preferred to be called "Indiana Groffdale Conference".〔(Elkhart County Old Order Mennonite Settlement (Indiana, USA) on Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online )〕〔Stephen Scott: An Introduction to Old Order and Conservative Mennonite Groups, page 72.〕
There is another John Martin group, that may also be called John Martin Mennonites, that left the Groffdale Conference Mennonite Church in 1993, because the Groffdale Conference had allowed electricity in homes and telephones in 1976, what the John Martin did not approve. Around the year 2000 there were 77 adult members of the group.〔Donald B. Kraybill and C. Nelson Hostetter: ''Anabaptist World USA'', Scottdale, PA and Waterloo, Ontario 2001, page 169〕
== References ==



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